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IMDb > A Canterbury Tale (1944)
A Canterbury Tale
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A Canterbury Tale (1944) More at IMDbPro »

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Overview

User Rating:
7.7/10   1,597 votes
MOVIEmeter: ?
Down 5% in popularity this week. See why on IMDbPro.
Writers:
Michael Powell (written by) &
Emeric Pressburger (written by)
Contact:
View company contact information for A Canterbury Tale on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
21 January 1949 (USA) more
Genre:
Tagline:
Four modern pilgrims in a story of today - yet away from war.
Plot:
A 'Land Girl', an American GI, and a British soldier find themselves together in a small Kent town on the road to Canterbury... more | add synopsis
Plot Keywords:
User Reviews:
Very good! more (47 total)

Cast

  (Cast overview, first billed only)
Eric Portman ... Thomas Colpeper, JP
Sheila Sim ... Alison Smith
Dennis Price ... Peter Gibbs
Sergeant John Sweet ... Bob Johnson (as Sergt. John Sweet, U.S. Army)
Esmond Knight ... Narrator (non-US versions) / Seven-Sisters Soldier / Village Idiot
Charles Hawtrey ... Thomas Duckett
Hay Petrie ... Woodcock
George Merritt ... Ned Horton
Edward Rigby ... Jim Horton
Freda Jackson ... Prudence Honeywood
Betty Jardine ... Fee Baker
Eliot Makeham ... Organist
Harvey Golden ... Sergt. Roczinsky
Leonard Smith ... Leslie
James Tamsitt ... Terry
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Additional Details

Runtime:
124 min | USA:95 min
Country:
Language:
Aspect Ratio:
1.37 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Mono (Western Electric Recording)
Certification:
Company:

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
Gone with the Wind (1939) author Margaret Mitchell was on her way to see a showing of this film with her husband when she was hit by a speeding car. She was knocked out, and died five days later, having never recovered consciousness. more
Quotes:
Alison Smith: Did you hear the news about last night Mr. Horton?
Jim Horton: There wasn't nothing on the wireless.
Alison Smith: No I didn't mean that sort of news. I meant what happened here last night.
Ned Horton: We get all our local news at 6 o'clock, Miss.
Bob Johnson: You got a local newspaper?
Ned Horton: No. That's when the pub opens.
more
Movie Connections:
Referenced in Days of Heaven (1978) more

FAQ

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24 out of 26 people found the following review useful.
Very good!, 12 October 2002
10/10
Author: zetes from Saint Paul, MN

A wonderful film, as you might expect, from the cinema's greatest directorial duo. It's unique in mood and pace amongst the many Archers films that I've seen. The others move at a brisk pace, going from one plot element to the next. No harm in that, of course. It works very well for films like One of Our Aircraft Is Missing, I Know Where I'm Going!, A Matter of Life and Death and the others. A Canterbury Tale, on the other hand, stops and smells the roses as it leisurely - and semi-plotlessly - strolls through the English countryside on the trail to Canterbury Cathedral. Three young people, an American G.I. named Bob Johnson (Seargant John Sweet), a British soldier, Peter Gibbs (Dennis Price), and a young woman from London, Alison Smith (Sheila Sim), moving to the countryside for work. The all arrive in the small town of Kent on the same train, and they walk together trying to find the hotel. An assailant pops out of nowhere in the impenetrable dark and throws glue all over Alison's hair. Over the next few days they look for "the Glueman." The film doesn't always work, especially concerning the Glueman subplot, which almost seems like it is the plot for most of the movie. The investigation and solution are the weakest scenes in the film. But there are dozens of gorgeous sequences within the film. I especially love the sequence with the children playing war. The film gets especially good during its extended finale, where the three (actually four) main characters go to Canterbury, and their pilgrimages pay off. The three leads are excellent. The fourth main character, the magistrate of Kent, Thomas Colpeper (Eric Portman), is the weakest and I'd just rather forget his role in the film myself. Perhaps he will work better in subsequent viewings. The best aspect of the film is its top shelf cinematography, maybe the best black and white that I've seen from the Archers. A lot of the scenes take place, ingeniously, in total darkness. These work so much better than imaginable! 9/10.

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